This dissertation addresses questions of knowledge, identity, scientific activity and social reproduction among nuclear weapons experts at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Throughout the Cold War, the laboratory\u27s weapons community produced an enormous body of knowledge about nuclear weapons through engaging iteratively in an experimental cycle that consisted of designing, building and testing experimental nuclear explosives. This design and test cycle also fulfilled critical social functions. providing a site for the reproduction of skills and understandings in novice weaponeers as well as an engine for the ongoing integration of the many ways of knowing that existed in the laboratory. However, Congressional legislation halted the ...
This dissertation investigates the social construction and discursive emergence of US nuclear weapon...
This thesis contains the historiography of nuclear age, from the first atomic bombs through the use ...
This history of America\u27s post-World War II atomic program examines the institutional impulses th...
Based on ongoing ethnographic research at Los Alamos National Laboratory, this paper explores a shif...
Thesis: Ph. D. in History, Anthropology, and Science, Technology and Society (HASTS), Massachusetts ...
This dissertation theorizes risk communication and rhetoric at the intersection of workplace and liv...
This dissertation examines nuclear weapons manufacturing in the American West from 1942 through the ...
The American system of nuclear weapons research and development was conceived and developed not as a...
vi, 95 p. A THESIS Presented to the Department of History and the Honors College of the University o...
During World War II, the small New Mexican town of Los Alamos hosted a top-secret laboratory for the...
The story of U. S. nuclear testing between 1945 and 1963 is a vivid and exciting one, but also one o...
This paper seeks to answer the question of how the development of nuclearweapons changed the nature ...
This dissertation investigates the visual legacy of the atomic bomb as viewed through the eyes of a ...
Communities of nuclear workers have evolved in distinctive contexts. During the Manhattan Project th...
This dissertation explores the politics of waste, health, and remediation at Washington State's Hanf...
This dissertation investigates the social construction and discursive emergence of US nuclear weapon...
This thesis contains the historiography of nuclear age, from the first atomic bombs through the use ...
This history of America\u27s post-World War II atomic program examines the institutional impulses th...
Based on ongoing ethnographic research at Los Alamos National Laboratory, this paper explores a shif...
Thesis: Ph. D. in History, Anthropology, and Science, Technology and Society (HASTS), Massachusetts ...
This dissertation theorizes risk communication and rhetoric at the intersection of workplace and liv...
This dissertation examines nuclear weapons manufacturing in the American West from 1942 through the ...
The American system of nuclear weapons research and development was conceived and developed not as a...
vi, 95 p. A THESIS Presented to the Department of History and the Honors College of the University o...
During World War II, the small New Mexican town of Los Alamos hosted a top-secret laboratory for the...
The story of U. S. nuclear testing between 1945 and 1963 is a vivid and exciting one, but also one o...
This paper seeks to answer the question of how the development of nuclearweapons changed the nature ...
This dissertation investigates the visual legacy of the atomic bomb as viewed through the eyes of a ...
Communities of nuclear workers have evolved in distinctive contexts. During the Manhattan Project th...
This dissertation explores the politics of waste, health, and remediation at Washington State's Hanf...
This dissertation investigates the social construction and discursive emergence of US nuclear weapon...
This thesis contains the historiography of nuclear age, from the first atomic bombs through the use ...
This history of America\u27s post-World War II atomic program examines the institutional impulses th...